- Zhao, Xiaobei;
- Little, Paul;
- Hoyle, Alan;
- Pegna, Guillaume;
- Hayward, Michele;
- Ivanova, Anastasia;
- Parker, Joel;
- Marron, David;
- Soloway, Matthew;
- Jo, Heejoon;
- Salazar, Ashley;
- Papakonstantinou, Michael;
- Bouchard, Deeanna;
- Jefferys, Stuart;
- Hoadley, Katherine;
- Ollila, David;
- Frank, Jill;
- Thomas, Nancy;
- Googe, Paul;
- Ezzell, Ashley;
- Collichio, Frances;
- Lee, Carrie;
- Earp, H;
- Sharpless, Norman;
- Hugo, Willy;
- Wilmott, James;
- Quek, Camelia;
- Waddell, Nicola;
- Johansson, Peter;
- Thompson, John;
- Hayward, Nicholas;
- Mann, Graham;
- Lo, Roger;
- Johnson, Douglas;
- Scolyer, Richard;
- Hayes, D;
- Moschos, Stergios
Background: Little is known about the prognostic significance of somatically mutated genes in metastatic melanoma (MM). We have employed a combined clinical and bioinformatics approach on tumor samples from cutaneous melanoma (SKCM) as part of The Cancer Genome Atlas project (TCGA) to identify mutated genes with potential clinical relevance. Methods: After limiting our DNA sequencing analysis to MM samples (n = 356) and to the CANCER CENSUS gene list, we filtered out mutations with low functional significance (snpEFF). We performed Cox analysis on 53 genes that were mutated in ≥3% of samples, and had ≥50% difference in incidence of mutations in deceased subjects versus alive subjects. Results: Four genes were potentially prognostic [RAC1, FGFR1, CARD11, CIITA; false discovery rate (FDR) < 0.2]. We identified 18 additional genes (e.g., SPEN, PDGFRB, GNAS, MAP2K1, EGFR, TSC2) that were less likely to have prognostic value (FDR < 0.4). Most somatic mutations in these 22 genes were infrequent (< 10%), associated with high somatic mutation burden, and were evenly distributed across all exons, except for RAC1 and MAP2K1. Mutations in only 9 of these 22 genes were also identified by RNA sequencing in >75% of the samples that exhibited corresponding DNA mutations. The low frequency, UV signature type and RNA expression of the 22 genes in MM samples were confirmed in a separate multi-institution validation cohort (n = 413). An underpowered analysis within a subset of this validation cohort with available patient follow-up (n = 224) showed that somatic mutations in SPEN and RAC1 reached borderline prognostic significance [log-rank favorable (p = 0.09) and adverse (p = 0.07), respectively]. Somatic mutations in SPEN, and to a lesser extent RAC1, were not associated with definite gene copy number or RNA expression alterations. High (>2+) nuclear plus cytoplasmic expression intensity for SPEN was associated with longer melanoma-specific overall survival (OS) compared to lower (≤ 2+) nuclear intensity (p = 0.048). We conclude that expressed somatic mutations in infrequently mutated genes beyond the well-characterized ones (e.g., BRAF, RAS, CDKN2A, PTEN, TP53), such as RAC1 and SPEN, may have prognostic significance in MM.